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This thought-provoking Research Handbook offers a critical survey
of the law and governance issues facing the world's oceans and
coasts in this era of Anthropocentric climate change. It discusses
the biophysical impacts that climate change is having upon our
oceans and coasts, as well as the various ways that international,
national and sub-national laws have sought to respond. With
contributions from scientists and lawyers, this comprehensive
Research Handbook provides cutting edge analysis of the marine
governance responses to climate change and how this will need to
adapt in a rapidly changing world. It reflects on the interaction
of climate change with regional marine governance regimes and
analyses the likely impacts on maritime and national security.
Illustrating the up-to-date treatment of interactions between
climate and oceans regimes, this incisive Research Handbook
examines the possible adaptation options to address specific issues
for our oceans and coasts. The Research Handbook on Climate Change,
Oceans and Coasts will be a key resource for students, scholars and
practitioners of climate change, water law and environmental law
and policy, while also being of benefit to researchers in the
cross-cutting fields of human rights and disaster law.
Winner of the SLS Peter Birks Prize for Outstanding Legal
Scholarship 2009. The use of private property rights to regulate
natural resources is a controversial topic because it touches upon
two critical issues: the allocation of wealth in society and the
conservation and management of limited resources. This book
explores the extension of private property rights and market
mechanisms to natural resources in international areas from a legal
perspective. It uses marine fisheries to illustrate the issues that
can arise in the design of regulatory regimes for natural
resources. If property rights are used to regulate natural
resources then it is essential that we understand how the law and
values embedded within legal systems shape the development and
operation of property rights in practice. The author constructs a
version of property that articulates both the private and public
function of property. This restores some much needed balance to
property discourse. He also assesses the impact of international
law on the use of property rights-a much neglected topic-and shows
how different legal and socio-political values that inhere in
different legal regimes fundamentally shape the construction of
property rights. Despite the many claimed benefits to be had from
the use of private property rights-based management systems, the
author warns against an uncritical acceptance of this approach and,
in particular, questions whether private property rights are the
most suitable and effective arrangement of regulating of natural
resources. He suggests that much more complex forms of holding,
such as stewardship, may be required to meet physical, legal and
moral imperatives associated with natural resources.
It is now more than ten years since the 1982 United Nations
Convention on the Law of the Sea (LOSC) came into force and more
than twenty years since it was concluded in December of 1982 after
more than nine years of negotiations. The famous "package deal"
that it represented addressed many of the problematic issues that
previous conventions had been unable to settle. This collection of
essays, by leading academics and practitioners, provides a critical
review of the LOSC and its relationship to and interface with the
wide range of developments which have occurred since 1982. The
individual chapters reveal a number of core themes, including the
need to maintain the integrity of the LOSC and its centrality to
oceans regulation; the tension between regional global regimes for
oceans governance and the struggle to reconcile these within the
LOSC; the gradual consolidation of authority over oceans space; the
difficulty of adapting some of the more dated provisions of the
LOSC to deal with unforeseen contemporary issues of oceans use; and
the consequent development of the general obligations of the LOSC
through binding and non-binding agreements. They clearly indicate
the potential impact and role of post-LOSC agreements and
institutions in developing the law of the sea and resolving some of
the outstanding substantive issues. From this it is clear that the
future of the Law of the Sea will involve an understanding of the
wider legal environment within which it operates.
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The Scales of Justice
Richard Barnes
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R310
R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
Save R55 (18%)
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The Scales of Justice
Richard Barnes
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R507
R413
Discovery Miles 4 130
Save R94 (19%)
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Mnemosyne (Paperback)
Richard Barnes
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R316
R278
Discovery Miles 2 780
Save R38 (12%)
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What convinces someone to become an Atheist? Or a theist? In his
book The God Delusion Richard Dawkins presents the arguments that
he hopes will convince his readers to become atheists. This book
examines those arguments and sets out the evidence for the
existence of God found in Dawkins and his book.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy
Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive
selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to
reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional
imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor
pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues
beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving and promoting the world's literature.
Are you where God wants you to be? In this book, you will discover
how to make the journey from where you are right now to where God
wants you to be. You will need to be redeployed, released,
redressed, renewed, reserved, restored and become a Citizen of
Heaven as you go from... Fisherman to Follower Prison without
Parole to Freedom by Grace Sin-Stained Rags to Robes of
Righteousness Enduring Life to Enjoying Life A Life of Worry to a
Life of Blessings Death and Defeat to New Life and Victory
The history of international law is replete with concepts that have
generated change: individual criminal responsibility, common
heritage of mankind and sustainable development to name but a few.
These are concepts that have influenced the scope, structure and
purpose of international law. This book explores the extent to
which Responsibility to Protect (R2P) possesses the same
transformative potential, showing how R2P shifts our understanding
of both the potential and practice of international law.
Responsibility to Protect is both an ambitious and an ambiguous
concept in international law. Ambiguity creates space for debate
and the potential for legal development, but it may also generate
misunderstanding, false expectations and uncertainty. Despite its
ambiguity, R2P has quickly found a place within international legal
texts. At the same time its ambiguity or rather the tensions the
concept generates has also helped generate an enormous range of
scholarship. This collection of essays presents a more fundamental
critical evaluation of R2P, exploring how it interacts with
existing concepts and values, and how this influences normative
developments within international law. In particular, the essays
explore the influence of R2P upon sovereignty as responsibility,
the continued advance of positive human rights obligations and the
safeguarding of international community interests.These themes are
explored in a range of essays written by new and established
scholars. The essays explore the moral and political foundations of
R2P, the expansion of R2P to non-state actors, and the interaction
between R2P and certain branches of international law, such as use
of force, responsibility as liability, humanitarian law and
international criminal law.
Gracefully written and brilliantly illustrated, this handsome new
volume captures the vision, the wit, and the down-to-earth
inventiveness of one of the most influential and beloved architects
of the early twentieth century. Raised in Greenwich Village and
trained in Paris, Maybeck spent most of his long career in northern
California. An irrepressible bohemian with no desire to run a large
office, he spent much of his time designing houses for friends and
family, as well as for other patrons so loyal that they often hired
him to design more than one house. Maybeck also created two of the
most beautiful buildings in all of California: the exhilarating
Church of Christ, Scientist, in Berkeley, and the gloriously
romantic Palace of Fine Arts, in San Francisco. This incisive
overview - the first to feature color reproductions of Maybeck's
exquisite interiors and exteriors - analyzes every aspect of his
life and work. Not only is his architecture thoroughly discussed
and illustrated but also his furniture, his lighting designs, and
his innovations in fire-resistant construction. The book is also
enlivened by documentary photographs, by clearly drawn plans, and
by several of Maybeck's dazzling, previously unpublished visionary
drawings. Bernard Maybeck is a major study of an internationally
significant architect whose environmentally responsive work has
much to offer today's designers and whose houses have given
enormous pleasure to those fortunate enough to visit or dwell in
them.
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